2026-05-20T10:01:25.085Z / reuters.com
华盛顿,5月20日(路透社)——2月20日,美国最高法院推翻了特朗普的全面全球关税政策,这是他经济和外交战略的核心组成部分,当时特朗普对此怒不可遏。而这可能不会是特朗普在本届最高法院任期内遭遇的最后一次挫折。
另有四起涉及特朗普的重大案件将由美国最高司法机构在大约下个月底前作出裁决。这些案件包括:他试图限制出生公民权、解雇一名美联储理事会成员、罢免一名联邦贸易委员会委员,以及终止数十万来自海地和叙利亚移民的受保护身份。
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由特朗普首任总统任期内任命的三名大法官组成的6票对3票的保守派多数派,在特朗普去年重返白宫后作出的一系列紧急裁决中支持过他。但根据大法官们在案件辩论中提出的问题来看,特朗普可能会在出生公民权和解雇美联储官员这两起案件中败诉。
最高法院将于周四发布新一批裁决。
佐治亚州立大学法学教授安东尼·迈克尔·克赖斯表示:“特朗普政府会遭遇一系列败诉,但我认为这些失利与政府将取得的胜诉数量相比不值一提。”
一项行政命令
在特朗普第二个总统任期的首日,他签署了一项行政命令,指示美国各机构不要承认那些父母既非美国公民也非合法永久居民(即所谓的“绿卡”持有者)的在美国出生儿童的公民身份。这项指令是这位共和党总统强硬移民政策的核心内容。
在4月1日的案件辩论中,大多数大法官对特朗普这项指令的合法性表示怀疑。争议焦点在于,特朗普的命令是否违反了美国宪法第十四修正案中有关公民身份的条款,以及是否违反了编纂出生公民权权利的联邦法律。
克赖斯表示,特朗普任命的三名大法官——布雷特·卡瓦诺、尼尔·戈萨奇和艾米·科尼·巴雷特——在辩论中似乎都对总统的法律立场并不热衷。
“特朗普政府很可能会以7票对2票的结果败诉,”克赖斯说。
宾夕法尼亚大学政治学教授罗杰斯·史密斯表示,长期以来大多数美国人都支持现行的出生公民权政策。
“自20世纪90年代以来,共和党多次试图修改出生公民权规则,但即便共和党控制了参众两院,这些提案也从未在国会委员会获得通过,这是有原因的,”史密斯说。“大多数国会议员都知道,他们的大多数选民都不支持修改现行政策。”
丽莎·库克案
自1913年美联储成立以来,在特朗普之前没有任何总统试图罢免一名央行官员。去年特朗普以其一名任命官员提出的未经证实的指控为由,试图解雇美联储理事丽莎·库克,指控她参与抵押贷款欺诈,但库克称这些指控只不过是因货币政策分歧而罢免她的借口。
在1月21日的案件辩论中,大多数大法官对如果支持特朗普关于他有权罢免库克的主张,可能会对美联储珍视的政治独立性产生何种影响表示担忧。
最高法院去年10月决定受理库克案时,选择在法律纠纷解决期间让库克继续留任。但在联邦贸易委员会委员丽贝卡·斯劳特一案中,最高法院并未作出同样安排,允许特朗普在斯劳特提起法律诉讼期间将其罢免。
12月8日法庭就斯劳特案举行辩论时,保守派大法官暗示他们将支持特朗普解雇斯劳特的决定。美国司法部已请求最高法院利用此案推翻1935年的一项先例,该先例通过保护独立机构负责人免受罢免,限制了总统权力。
国会1914年通过的一项法律规定,总统只能因效率低下、玩忽职守或在职渎职等正当理由罢免联邦贸易委员会委员,而不能因政策分歧罢免,以防范政治干预。类似的保护措施也适用于其他二十多个独立机构的官员。
保守派大法官似乎支持特朗普政府的论点,即此类任期保护侵犯了宪法赋予总统的权力。
明尼苏达大学政治学教授蒂莫西·约翰逊表示:“如果最高法院在斯劳特案中作出有利于特朗普的裁决,将剥夺国会的权力,大幅扩大总统的权限。”
布拉德利大学政治学教授塔雷利·戴维斯表示,从库克案的辩论来看,大法官们似乎显然希望保护美联储的独立性。
“但我没有听到有任何法律原则能真正将美联储与联邦贸易委员会区分开来,”戴维斯说。
临时保护身份
4月29日,最高法院就特朗普政府取消35万海地移民和6100名叙利亚移民的临时人道主义保护身份一案举行了听证会。多年来,美国政府为这些移民提供了临时保护身份。最高法院历来在移民、国家安全和外交政策事务上尊重总统的决定。
特朗普政府已着手撤销根据政府《临时保护身份计划》做出的身份认定,该计划允许来自遭受战争、自然灾害或其他灾难国家的移民在美国生活和工作,直到他们返回祖国变得安全为止。
简·沃尔夫报道;威尔·邓纳姆编辑
Supreme Court rulings loom in four major Trump-related cases
2026-05-20T10:01:25.085Z / reuters.com
WASHINGTON, May 20 (Reuters) – President Donald Trump was incensed on February 20 when the U.S. Supreme Court struck down his sweeping global tariffs, an integral part of his economic and foreign policy strategy. That may not be the last disappointment for Trump during the court’s current term.
Four more major cases involving Trump are due to be decided by the top U.S. judicial body by around the end of next month. They involve his effort to restrict birthright citizenship, fire a member of the U.S. Federal Reserve Board of Governors, oust a Federal Trade Commission member and end protected status for hundreds of thousands of immigrants from Haiti and Syria.
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The Supreme Court, whose 6-3 conservative majority includes three justices he appointed during his first term as president, has backed Trump in a series of decisions issued on an emergency basis since he returned to office last year. But, based on questions posed by the justices during arguments in the cases, Trump may lose on birthright citizenship and the Fed firing.
The court next issues rulings on Thursday.
“There are going to be a series of losses for the Trump administration, but I think they pale in comparison to the number of wins that the administration will get,” Georgia State University law professor Anthony Michael Kreis said.
AN EXECUTIVE ORDER
On the first day of his second term as president, Trump signed an executive order that instructed U.S. agencies not to recognize the citizenship of children born in the United States if neither parent is an American citizen or legal permanent resident, also called a “green card” holder. The directive is a central element of the Republican president’s hardline approach toward immigration.
During arguments in the case on April 1, most of the justices signaled skepticism about the legality of Trump’s directive. At issue is whether Trump’s order violated citizenship language in the U.S. Constitution’s 14th Amendment as well as a federal law codifying birthright citizenship rights.
None of the three Trump appointees – Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett – seemed enthusiastic about the president’s legal positions during the arguments, Kreis said.
“The Trump administration is probably looking at a 7-2 loss,” Kreis said.
University of Pennsylvania political science professor Rogers Smith said a majority of Americans has long supported current birthright citizenship policies.
“There is a reason that repeated Republican efforts since the 1990s to change birthright citizenship rules have never made it out of committee in Congress, even when Republicans controlled both legislative chambers,” Smith said. “Most members of Congress know that most of their constituents do not favor changing current policies.”
THE LISA COOK CASE
Since the Fed was created in 1913, no president until Trump had tried to oust a central bank official. When Trump last year moved to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, he cited unproven claims made by one of his appointees that Cook had engaged in mortgage fraud, though she said the allegations were a mere pretext to oust her over monetary policy differences.
During January 21 arguments in the case, most of the justices expressed unease about the ramifications for the Fed’s cherished independence from political influence if they were to endorse Trump’s arguments that he acted within his powers in seeking to remove Cook.
When the Supreme Court decided last October to hear the Cook case, it opted to leave her in the post while the legal dispute played out. It did not do so with Federal Trade Commission member Rebecca Slaughter, allowing Trump to remove her while her legal challenge proceeded.
When the court heard arguments on December 8, the conservative justices signaled they would uphold Trump’s firing of Slaughter. The Justice Department has asked the court to use the case to overturn its 1935 precedent that has constrained presidential power by protecting the heads of independent agencies from removal.
A 1914 law passed by Congress permits a president to oust FTC commissioners only for cause – such as inefficiency, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office – but not for policy differences to guard against political interference. Similar protections cover officials at more than two dozen other independent agencies.
The conservative justices appeared to embrace the Trump administration’s arguments that such tenure protections encroached on presidential power under the Constitution.
“A decision in favor of Trump in the Slaughter case will strip power away from Congress and give much more to the president,” University of Minnesota political science professor Timothy Johnson said.
Bradley University political science professor Taraleigh Davis said that it seemed clear during the arguments in the Cook case that the justices want to protect the Fed.
“But I didn’t hear an answer to what legal principle actually distinguishes the Fed from the FTC,” Davis said.
TEMPORARY PROTECTED STATUS
The court heard arguments on April 29 over the Trump administration’s move to strip 350,000 immigrants from Haiti and 6,100 from Syria of temporary humanitarian protections provided years ago by the U.S. government. The court traditionally has deferred to presidents on matters of immigration, national security and foreign policy.
Trump’s administration has moved to rescind designations under the government’s Temporary Protected Status program that lets migrants from nations stricken by war, natural disaster or other catastrophes live and work in the United States while it is unsafe for them to return to their home countries.
Reporting by Jan Wolfe; Editing by Will Dunham
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